I was somewhat unfair to the Forum in my last letter. The opponents of Fargo’s plan to build dams on the area rivers owe a debt to the Forum. But for the opinion page our opposition would be little known. Our arguments against the construction of these dams are not so much about the destruction of historic family farms; though the typical Forum reader would think so as folksy “human interest” articles are the only non-opinion press we seem to get. The heart of the matter is that the diversion could be built without dams on the Wild Rice and Red rivers and without the destruction of the communities to the south.

The engineering on the issue shows that building several upstream retention sites to temporarily detain water on the rivers south of the FM area could reduce the peak flow of flood water through Fargo by as much as 1.7 feet. Reducing the size of the diversion area would also have significant impact.

The present plan calls for the construction of the dams and the diversion channel four miles further south than what was initially proposed by the engineers of the Army Corps. Fargo decided the diversion should start four miles further south, and the diversion area be that much bigger. Fargo’s decision to build the dams four miles further south had nothing to do with engineering, or greater protection; it had, according to the Corps, everything to do with Fargo’s plans for future development.

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Nearly all of these

29,500 acres flood

every time we have a

flood event. It is

natural flood plain,

natural storage area.

[ Click Photo for Large View ]

The land between the Corps’ proposed inlet and Fargo’s chosen site amounts to approximately 29,500 acres. Nearly all of these 29,500 acres flood every time we have a flood event. It is natural flood plain, natural storage area. Damming and draining these acres necessarily drastically increases the amount of water that has to be diverted. Fargo intends to “stage” this water onto the communities, cities and counties to its south, so it can develop this natural flood plain. This, to use the words of Richland County Commissioner Perry Miller, is what gives us heartburn. The need for staging, i.e. dams, would be further reduced by flowing more water through Fargo, and adopting a reasonable level of protection. Fargo has claimed from the start of this debate that it needs, and the current plan will provide, 500 year protection. This whole multi-billion dollar project has been sold as a 500 year safety net. This is unreasonable for an area that has not, in recorded history, even seen a 100 year flood event. The actual level of protection provided by the proposed dams and diversion appears to be debatable as the corps now claims that the present plan only provides 100 year protection, a contradiction that is a discussion for another day.
In summary the opponents have proposed eliminating the dams by,

1) building upstream retention;
2) moving the inlet back to the site originally proposed by the engineers;
3) flowing a greater amount of water through Fargo; and
4) seeking a reasonable level of protection.

At the meeting in Wahpeton last week Richland and Wilkin counties were told “no”. The Army Corps and Fargo are not interested in looking into these proposals. Despite statements by Fargo’s leaders and Colonel Price, former Army Corps Commander of the project, there are no studies, no investigation, and no plans to look into anything other than to build these dams, drain the natural flood plain and “stage” it onto our communities. Exploring alternatives that might eliminate the need to destroy our communities is not something Fargo leaders will consider or investigate. We were told there will be no compromise.

Permanent flood protection could be built if Fargo acted reasonably to protect Fargo, and not the interests of a future Fargo. The present plan is unreasonable, immoral and will ultimately be found to be unlawful. So long as Fargo seeks to protect its own future interests and future growth without regard for, and at the expense of, the rights and property of its neighbors – this plan will fail. Fargo’s present leaders will be remembered, not for having brought permanent flood protection to Fargo, but by their arrogance and unreasonableness, for having failed at a staggering cost.

2 Responses
to “ Fargo’s Diversion Immoral, A Better Path Forward ”

This picture is Marcus Larsoooon’s find. (That’s what you get for spelling my name wrong Marcus). The view is southwest towards the Wild Rice Bar. You can see the S curve of I-29. This is the natural flood plain, natural flood water storage and where water would be stored if the inlet was built where the Army Corp’s proposed but Fargo overruled. This is the water that will be “staged” onto our communities behind the Fargo’s dams 4 miles south of this site. Great Job Marcuuus.

I don’t think most people in Fargo, or better yet, anyone that hears about the Fargo Moorhead Dam and FM Diversion can really visualize the severe impacts to the natural flood plain that Fargo is proposing.

When Dennis Walaker, Daryl Vanyo, Tim Mahoney, Kent Conrad, Keith Berndt…etc, try and rally sympathy for Fargo as a result of the devastation in Minot…, one really has to pause and consider why Fargo would propose building a $2.04 billion dollar dam and diversion to develop a natural flood plain that has flooded during every flood event.

Minot residents that dropped flood insurance because the flood insurance requirement was relaxed were lulled into a false sense of security.

Fargo isn’t saving residents $19 million a year in flood insurance premiums. That is a load of horse manure!

The threat of flooding still exists behind 2 high risk dams and earthen levee’s.

Fargo will be placing Fargo residents at extreme financial risk when the dam and diversion experience an uncontrolled release or become inundated during a summer rainstorm and people lose everything because they had no flood insurance.

People really need to take a long hard look at the picture and ask themselves how inept Fargo, the Diversion Authority, Cass County and USACE actually are…, to propose moving water from a low natural flood plain to high ground so land developers can profit at the expense of taxpayers.